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How Young Americans Who Dont Finish College See Their Chances for Success
A PUBLIC AGENDA REPORT FOR THE BILL & MELINDA GATES FOUNDATION
By Jean Johnson, Jon Rochkind and Amber Ott with Samantha DuPont and Jeremy Hess Prepared with support from the
How Young Americans Who Dont Finish College See Their Chances for Success
By Jean Johnson, Jon Rochkind and Amber Ott with Samantha DuPont and Jeremy Hess
INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................. 2 FINDING ONE.................................................................................................................. 6 FINDING TWO ................................................................................................................. 8 FINDING THREE ............................................................................................................ 13 FINDING FOUR ............................................................................................................. 15 FINDING FIVE ................................................................................................................ 18 IMPLICATIONS AND QUESTIONS ................................................................................ 19 ABOUT THE STUDY ....................................................................................................... 22 FULL SURVEY RESULTS ............................................................................................... 23 CHARACTERISTICS OF THE SAMPLE .......................................................................... 42 OUR THANKS ................................................................................................................ 45 ABOUT THE BILL & MELINDA GATES FOUNDATION .................................................. 45 ABOUT PUBLIC AGENDA .............................................................................................. 46
INTRODUCTION
In high school, the vast majority of young Americans say they want to go to college, but in the end, only 4 in 10 earn a credential by the time they are 35.1 Thats a problem for the young people themselvesworkers without credentials beyond high school earn less and are more likely to be unemployed.2 Its also a problem for the country as a whole. Policymakers in business, government, and education say the United States needs more college-educated workers to remain internationally competitive.3 President Obama, for one, has recommended that all students complete at least one year of education beyond high school.4
1 2
Public Agendas calculations based on Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (IPUMS). Available from: http://usa.ipums.org/usa. The unemployment rate for those with a high school diploma is more than twice that of those with a bachelors degree or higher. And those with a bachelors degree earn almost twice as much money as those with only a high school diploma. See the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Back to College (September 2010). Retrieved May 2, 2011, from http://www.bls.gov/spotlight/2010/college. See the Council of Economic Advisors, Preparing the Workers of Today for the Jobs of Tomorrow (July 2009), and the Center on Education and the Workforce at Georgetown University, Help Wanted: Projections of Jobs and Education Requirements Through 2018 (June 2010). White House Press Release (July 14, 2009). Retrieved on May 2, 2011, from: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Excerpts-of-thePresidents-remarks-in-Warren-Michigan-and-fact-sheet-on-the-American-Graduation-Initiative/
HEAR MY STORY
As a result, there has been a concerted effort by leaders in federal, state, and local government, in higher education, and among foundations and policy organizations to increase college completion rates. We have better data, research, and analysis to shape solutions than were available several years ago. Across the country, elected officials, institutional leaders, faculty, K12 educators, and other key groups are looking at new approaches aimed at getting more young Americans to enter postsecondary programs and complete them successfully. The voices of young Americans themselves are sometimes muted in this crucial work. One Degree of Separation summarizes a piece of public opinion research designed to explore the perspective of a specific group of young Americans: those aged 26 to 34. We believe this group has especially important testimony to offer. By this age, most people are mature enough to think critically and realistically about the circumstances and decisions that are shaping their lives. Most people have begun to work, and young Americans in this group have set out to find jobs and build careers in one of the worst labor markets since the Great Depression. We know from previous research that most of these young people were encouraged to go to college by parents, teachers, and others.5 At least in theory, they have also been able to benefit from some of the changes being implemented to increase college access and completion, such as improved financial aid policies and greater choice of postsecondary degree and certification programs, not to mention increased public discussion about the value of a higher education credential. One Degree of Separation reports findings from a national random sample survey of more than 600 young Americans, asking them for their views on jobs, college, and their own economic prospects. The survey was designed to shed light on questions such as these: How do young Americans think about college and jobs as they become working-age adults and begin building their lives and careers? What circumstances shape and guide their decisions about college and jobs? Given the demonstrable benefits of getting a degree, what obstacles keep so many of them from accomplishing that goal? And in a tougher, more confusing economy for everyone, how are the nations young people faring? Are they optimistic that they can build economically secure lives? Do they see getting a higher education credential as the key to that security? Containing more than 100 questions, the study compares and contrasts the perspectives of young people who complete degrees in four-year, two-year, and technical certification programs to those of high school graduates who either never attended college or left before completing their course of study.
Public Agenda, Life after High School: Young People Talk about Their Hopes and Prospects (2004). http://www.publicagenda.org/reports/life-afterhigh-school.
A TRIFECTA OF BARRIERS
Americans of all ages have been daunted by todays tough economy, and the countrys traditional optimism has been shaken. Most people these days voice some concern about maintaining their standard of living. Half of Americans say they are worried that one of their familys major wage earners may become unemployed.6 But while anxiety about the economy is common enough, the results we report here illustrate a jarring divide between the experiences and attitudes of high school graduates in the workplace and those of young people who go on to complete a degree after high school. Even more troubling, the research suggests that young Americans who dont complete degrees beyond high school face three mutually reinforcing hurdlessome well-known and others less so. First, One Degree of Separation confirms, as other studies have shown, that most young people without higher education credentials have been economically disadvantaged from the get-gothey typically come from poorer, less well-educated families. Second, many lack basic knowledge about the higher education system and the expectations and demands of employers. Third, many are not convinced that getting a college degree will pay off for them, especially if they need to borrow money to do so. Many seem to envision an alternative non-college career path that may or may not exist in the coming years. On a more positive note, most young Americans display an admirable spunk about finding their way in the workforce, and, whether they have a degree or not, they certainly havent given up on themselves or their futures. Many offer thoughtful, reasoned decisions on whether or not to pursue higher education. The question is whether their optimism and flexibilityand their beliefs about the worth of a college degreewill prove to be an advantage, or whether their optimism will blind them to the realities of the job market down the road. In the following pages, we lay out the key results from the survey. While they shed new light on the perspectives of young adults in todays workforce, they also raise questions. For leaders focused on this issue, the most important may be what kind of options and support our society really envisions for young people who do not complete two-year or four-year college programs. This group of young adults may not fully understand the shifting patterns and demands of the workplace, but experts and leaders in business, government, and education are not necessarily in full agreement either. In some respects, this study suggests that policymakers and educators need to intensify research and debate about what we really mean by completing college. We also need to know more about the extent to which employers and educators agree on what skills and postsecondary options are needed for getting and holding on to good jobs.
Newsweek Poll conducted by Princeton Survey Research Associates International, September 29-30, 2010, available at http://www.pollingreport.com/consumer2.htm.
In the conclusion, we raise some additional questions for leaders in government, higher education, and business, and for the growing numbers of organizations working to make college completion achievable for any young American willing to strive for it. Finding One: Compared to young people with degrees, high school graduates are less confident about their financial prospects and much less likely to be on a solid career path. Finding Two: Despite their worries about the future and mixed experiences with jobs, most high school graduates believe there are still ways to succeed at work without additional education.
Finding Three: High school graduates are less likely to say its a good idea to borrow money to go to college. Finding Four: High school graduates are more skeptical about the motives of higher education institutions than college graduates. Finding Five: High school graduates have gaps in knowledge that could undercut their own ability to get a college degree in the future.
Finding One: Compared to young people with degrees, high school graduates are less confident about their financial prospects and much less likely to be on a solid career path.
By their mid-twenties, most people have finished their formal education and started working. Most have begun to build lives independent of their parents, and many have started families of their own. Life has begun to take shape for them. Yet even at this relatively young age, those who enter the workforce armed with only a high school diploma have begun to realize that their economic path in life may be difficult. Just 36 percent say it is very likely that they will be financially secure in their lifetimes. For young people with degrees,7 the world looks very differentmore than half (55 percent) fully expect that their lives will be economically stable. The economic recession of 2008 and 2009 hit younger Americans hard. In this study, 16 percent of young people not currently in school report being unemployed regardless of education level.8 But for those with jobs, the difference between having a college degree and having a high school diploma is already evident. areerversusjustajob:Most college graduates (63 C percent) see their current job as a career, and relatively few think of it as just a job to get you by. But for high school graduates, the situation is almost completely reversed. Just 4 in 10 see their current job
as a career, while a third (33 percent) say its just something to help them get by. As one young woman from Fort Wayne put it: [My] high school diploma is not doing anything [for me] these days. Paidbythehourandnotearningasmuch: Most employed high school grads (72 percent) work in jobs that pay by the hour, compared with only a third of the college grads (33 percent). And high school graduates are considerably more likely to be low wage earners. Nearly 3 in 10 (28 percent) earned less than $25,000 in 2009just 1 in 10 college graduates earned this little. Meanwhile, only 15 percent of high school graduates earned $75,000 or more. College graduates were almost three times as likely to earn this much (40 percent). orelikelytogofromjobtojob:More than a third M (36 percent) of high school graduates say theyve had five or more employers since they finished high school. Only 1 in 10 college grads (11 percent) have had this many employers since receiving their degree. This may be because high school graduates have spent more time in the workforce; it may also indicate that many young people without degrees havent yet found jobs that are a good match with their skills and interests. It may also reflect the insecurity of the jobs that high school graduates are most likely to find. Research has shown that hourly jobs have higher turnover rates than salaried jobs,9 and that they are more likely to be eliminated during lean economic times.10 This is how a young man in Washington, D.C., saw the situation:
In this report, college graduates or those with degrees are respondents who successfully completed a four-year or two-year degree or a licensed certification program. High school graduates in this report are defined as those whose highest credential is a high school diploma and who are not currently in a college or certification program. This is a larger figure than what is reported in the Current Population Survey, which states that as of April 2011 the unemployment rate for adults aged 2534 was 9.4%. Public Agenda includes all young adults who said they were unemployed, whether they were looking for work or not; the Bureau of Labor Statistics only reports as unemployed those who have been looking for work within the past month. See the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey (April 2011). Retrieved May 6, 2011, from http://www.bls.gov/web/empsit/ cpseea13.htm. Carnevale, A., and Rose, S. Low earners: Who are they? Do they have a way out? In R. Kazis & M. Miller (eds.), Low-Wage Workers in the New Economy (Washington, DC: The Urban Institute Press, 2001): 45-66. Appelbaum, E., Bernhardt, A., and Murnane, R. Low-Wage America: How Employers Are Reshaping Opportunity in the Workplace (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2003).
10
High school grads are less confident they will be financially secure in their lifetimes
Percent who say that it is very likely they will be financially secure in their lifetime
High school grads are less likely to see their jobs as leading to careers
Do you think of your current job as a career, a stepping stone to a career, or do you think of it as a job to get you by?
Percentage responding:
High School Grads 60 55% 40% 26% 33% 40 36% College Grads 20 63% 24% 13% 0 College Grads High School Grads 0 20 40 60 80 100%
Responses in charts may not always total 100 percent due to rounding and answer categories being combined. This may produce slight discrepancies between numbers in the survey results and numbers reported in charts.
The people that dont have the degrees, dont have the education or the skills or qualifications to get better paying jobsthey are being affected [by the poor economy and layoffs] more so than anybody else. Worriesaboutwhethertherearejobsforthem: For the young people surveyed who were unemployed, the high school grads were three times more likely (29 percent) to strongly agree with the statement I may not be able to find a job in the next year or so, compared with only 11 percent of college graduates. I read something [that] said the unemployment rate for people with at least a four-year degree is 5 percent. . . , a young man in D.C. told us. If you dont have as much education, if you dont have as much training in your area, you find yourself on the outside looking in.
percent of college graduates said this). Fewer than one in five high school graduates (18 percent) said that at least one of their parents had a four-year college degree or higher; 55 percent of those with degrees said this.
Finding Two: Despite their worries about the future and mixed experiences with jobs, most high school graduates believe there are still ways to succeed at work without additional education.
Most high school graduates may sense that economic insecurity will be a continuing part of their lives, but most still believe its possible to get a good job without a college degree. A majority (57 percent) say that there are many ways to succeed in the job market without college, compared with 40 percent who say that a college education is necessary for a person to be successful in todays work world. Not surprisingly perhaps, the results are almost exactly the opposite for young people with degrees. Most (55 percent) believe that college is necessary for success at work, a belief that presumably motivated them to complete their own programs of study. Americans in general increasingly see a college degree as a minimum requirement for getting ahead at work.12 For high school graduates, the idea that you can still make it in todays workplace without a higher education credential seems to stem from several sources. One is the belief that the economy offers a wide variety of jobs, and that there are some good jobs that dont require a degree. In fact, heading down this non-college track appears to be what many young people without degrees have in mind. Almost 4 in 10 (39 percent) high school graduates said that their current credential, a high school diploma,
Haveman, R., & Wolfe, B. (1995). The determinants of childrens attainments: A review of methods and findings. Journal of Economic Literature 33 (1995): 1829-1878.
11
Immerwahr, J., Johnson, J., Ott, A., and Rochkind, J. (2010). Squeeze Play 2010: Continued Public Anxiety On Cost, Harsher Judgments On How Colleges Are Run. National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education and Public Agenda. http://www.publicagenda.org/pages/squeeze-play-2010.
12
High school grads are more likely to say their families had financial troubles when they were growing up
Thinking back to when you lived with your parents, which do you think best describes how you and your family were financially?
Percentage responding:
High school grads are less likely to have parents with college credentials
Generally had extra money each month Had trouble getting by each month
28%
0
0 20 40 60 80 100%
20
40
60
80
100%
is all they need for their career goals. In focus groups conducted in connection with the project, young people without degrees often talked about jobs they might have in the future and/or how they might work their way up in their employment. Some mentioned that they would like to open their own businesses or work on their own. Moreover, many of the high school graduates believed that employers often ask for college degrees for work that could be done just as well by someone without the credential: 35 percent strongly agree that employers hire college graduates for jobs that could be done just as wellor betterby those without a degree. Others seemed to see the economy as changeable and unpredictable, and suggested that its just not possible to say now exactly what kind of education will be useful as time goes by. A high school grad from Fort Wayne said this: Who knows what the right degree to get into is? Who knows what the right field is to get into? Whats it going to be in five years? Ten years? What if I dont pick the right field? What if I go to school and decide to do something, and [suppose] it takes eight years to get that degree, and in eight years I dont have a job?
High school grads are less likely to believe college is essential to success
Do you think that a college education is necessary for a person to be successful in todays work world, or do you think that there are many ways to succeed in todays work world without a college education?
Percentage responding:
Dont know
40%
57%
55%
40%
2%
High School Grads
4%
College Grads
55%
43%
3%
General Public
39% 51% 8% 1%
Ph.D. is very likely to be financially secure in their lifetime. And just one percent of all the young people surveyed believed that someone who drops out of high school is very likely to be secure. But for the categories in between, the results were far more mixed. Just over a third of high school graduates (36 percent) said that someone who didnt go to college but became an apprentice in a trade (such as carpentry or plumbing) would be successful. A similar number (33 percent) thought it was very likely that someone who enlisted in the military would find financial security down the line. And only 35 percent of high school graduates said it was very likely that someone with a B.A. degree from their state university would be financially secure in their lifetime. Here, at least, the differences between the views of high school and college graduates were fairly modest. Young college graduates may be reasonably optimistic about their personal future economic securityremember that 55 percent think its very likely that they themselves will be financially securebut just over a third (34 percent) thought it was very likely that a person with a B.A. from a state university could count on economic stability. There were two notable differences between the high school and college graduates. One is that the high school grads were nearly twice as optimistic about the value of an associates degree: 26 percent of high school graduates (compared to only 14 percent of college graduates) said that someone who receives an associates degree is very likely to be financially secure in their lifetime. The numbers were exactly the same for someone who gets a one-year IT certificate from a technical school: 26 percent of high school graduates thought that such a person would be financially secure compared to only 14 percent of college graduates.
A young high school grad from Washington, D.C., said: If youre going towards the job that youre getting a [certification for], it is beneficial . . . . If theres two people side by side in comparison, and ones . . . [got a certificate] for that, as opposed to someone whos doing general [undergraduate degree] or something else. . . . I think that they would probably pick the person going towards the specific, as opposed to not. Public Agenda conducted a survey in 2009 looking at the views of young people aged 2230 who start college programs but dont complete them. Those young adults were less likely than college graduates to see a college degree as a necessity. They were also less likely to envision it as a prerequisite for fulfilling their own aspirations. For example, just over half (52 percent) of those who dropped out of college said that over the long run you earn more money if you have a college degree, compared with 66 percent of college graduates. Half of the young people who had left school without a degree said they knew many people who were doing well without one. But two years later, there seems to be a subtle difference in the way that young people without higher education credentials see the world. Most fully accept that college is a good thing and can be very beneficial in terms of getting a good job and building a future. But many dont seem to see it as an outright necessity. Perhaps since they dont see any genuine likelihood of getting a degree themselvesbecause of cost or poor academic preparation or another reasonthey look for another route. Rather than feeling bitter or hopeless, they believe that if they work hard, theyll be able to make it even without a college diploma. In this survey, when we asked young parents how important it was that their own children go to college, 84 percent of the college graduates said it was very
For todays young adults, only graduate degrees can provide a lifetime of economic security
Percentage answering that the following are very likely to be economically secure in their lifetime High School Grads College Grads
Someone who graduates from college and then goes on to a graduate school like law school or a PhD program
68% 75% 36% 55% 36% 29% 35% 34% 33% 27%
You, personally
Someone who graduates high school and becomes an apprentice in a field such as carpentry or plumbing
Someone who has received an undergraduate college degree from your state university
Someone whose parents are wealthy but does not go to college after graduating high school
Someone who gets a one-year certificate in Information Technology (IT) management from a technical school
Someone who graduates from high school and goes 16% right to work, but never takes any higher education courses Someone who starts college at your state university 7% but does not complete the degree 2%
5%
1% 1% 0 20 40 60 80 100%
important, but only 62 percent of the high school graduates said the same. Its still a majority, but the commitment to college for their children is clearly not as strong as with college graduatesand perhaps not as strong as it was a few years ago, when 77 percent of those who did not complete college said that it was very important that their children attend college. As we discuss in Finding Three, one explanation for this shift may be that more young people are beginning to weigh the value of a college degree against the financial dangers of borrowing money for tuition and not being able to earn the money back.
High school grads are less convinced borrowing money for college pays off
"Even if someone has to take out a loan to go to college, it is worth it in the long run"
Percentage responding:
8% 16% 37%
Finding Three: High school graduates are less likely to say its a good idea to borrow money to go to college.
According to The Project on Student Debt, a nonprofit organization, the average college senior graduates owing roughly $24,000 in education loans. Our findings show that 89 percent of all young adults we interviewed agree that students have to borrow too much money to pay for college. As the results below suggest, high school graduates are somewhat more likely to worry about borrowing money for college, and other questions in the survey confirm the discomfort they feel. Fewer than 4 in 10 (37 percent) high school graduates strongly agree that even if someone has to take out a loan to go to college, it is worth it, compared with more than half (54 percent) of college graduates who strongly agree. A young man in D.C. also had his doubts about whether getting a degree would really pay off once you were out working: If you cannot get these loans deferred or get a forbearance. . . . it can seriously impact your future. I had to default on the loan. . . . I also find that a college graduate is not going to really make enough money coming out the gate to always pay those loans.
39%
8%
5%
54% 33%
College Grads
High school grads are less convinced that a prestigious college is worth the cost
Which comes closest to your own view?
Percentage responding:
can afford, you should not take out a loan to go to college if you dont have to can, even if you have to take out a loan to pay for it
You should go to the best college or university that you Dont know
60%
36%
1%
47%
52%
College Grads
2%
For many high school graduates, borrowing money to go to college has a potential upside, but it also has a serious potential downsidethat of being in debt and burdened by college loan payments that you simply cant afford. Its an investment, but it carries risks. One analogy is that today borrowing money to go to college is like investing in the stock market: If you have the money and can afford the risk, the investment is sound. If you dont have the money or have to borrow to invest, its another story entirely. Yes, it might work out, but if it doesnt, youll be worse off than when you started.
College graduates are more likely than those students who left without a degree to have gotten help paying for college from virtually every source available. They are substantially more likely to have gotten scholarships (46 percent versus 13 percent of high school graduates) and federal, state, or Percentage percent versus 37 percent) or to have college grants (59answering that the following are very likely to taken out loansbe economically secure in their lifetime (65 percent versus 31 percent). College Someone who didn't go to college graduates are also more likely to have used money from but did an apprenticeship in a field their families or their own personal savings (83 percent such as plumping or carpentry versus 69 percent), although majorities of both groups did 36% this.
29%
As a woman in our D.C. focus group who left her associate Someone with a Bachelor's degree degree program said, I started going to community college, 35% but I was really paying it out of pocket. . . . Maybe if I 34% asked [the college] probably wouldve [been] more helpful, but I Someone who enlists in the military never asked. I didnt want their assistance very much, so thats also a matter of my personal choice of not asking 34% for their assistance too.
27%
Finding Four:who didn't go tograduates are more Someone High school college but did an apprenticeship in a field skeptical than college graduates about the such as plumping or carpentry motives of higher education institutions.
36%
Public Agenda has been tracking the views of the general 29% public about higher education for 18 years. Although Someone with an Associate's degree colleges a local community college at and universities generally retain the publics admiration and respect, especially compared to other sectors 26% like government or business, our surveys show a growing 14% skepticism about the way higher education is run. Most Someone with a one-year certificate Americans question whether their motives are mainly in a field like Information Technology financial or mainly educational. Most also wonder whether 26% colleges and universities are using the money they get from 14% students and taxpayers as effectively as they can. Most young adults share these concerns, with higher rates and goes right to work but doesn't take of high school graduates voicing concern than those with higher education courses college degrees. For example, most young adults believe that 16% there are many people in the United States who are
5% 0 20 40 60 80 100% Someone who graduates from high school
HS Grads
College Grads
qualified for college but dont have the opportunity to go, a view that is held by a majority of Americans regardless of age. In fact, 71 percent of high school graduates say this is the case, compared with 59 percent of college graduates. More than half of the public believes that colleges today behave more like most businesses and care more about the bottom line than about educating students. But these views are even stronger among the young adults surveyed for this project: 71 percent of high school graduates say this, as do 65 percent of college graduates. One young man in a D.C. focus group didnt mince words: Excuse me for my language, but I think people are really getting pimped. What they charge for things and how much just a book costs. For this young man, the trade-off clearly wasnt worth it. And so many people have made millions without any [higher education], he added. Even so, a majority of all young adults continues to believe that someone who is willing to make sacrifices such as living at home or working part time can complete college (57 percent of all young adults strongly agreed). In fact, when asked who is to blame for the low completion rate at four-year colleges, young adults are more likely to point fingers at students themselves rather than at higher education institutions, high schools, parents, or government, regardless of whether they completed a degree.
High School Grads College Grads General Public Say colleges are like most businesses and mainly care about the bottom line* 71% 65% 60% Say that the majority of qualified people do not have the opportunity to go to college 71% 59% 69%
20
40
60
80
100%
* vs. College today mainly care about education and making sure students have a good educational experience vs. Majority have the opportunity to go General public findings taken from Public Agendas Squeeze Play 2010
Overall, young adults most likely to say students themselves are to blame for lack of success in college
Percentage saying the following deserve a great deal or a lot of blame for the graduation rates of four-year public colleges
High School Grads Excellent investment* 30% Good investment 27% 46% Fair investment 44% 13% Poor investment 29% 10% Don't know 1%
College Grads
High School Grads College Grads Students 59% 69% High schools 29% 33%
Parents 22%
0 41%
20
40
60
80
100%
29%
20
40
60
80
100%
Finding Five: High school graduates have gaps in knowledge that could undercut their own ability to get a college degree in the future.
Despite their belief that they will find a way to earn a decent living without completing a college degree, nearly 4 in 10 high school graduates say they have given a lot of thought to going back to school. Another 3 in 10 have given it some thought. Yet most overestimate how quickly most students complete their degrees: 62 percent of all high school graduates are not sure or believe incorrectlythat the majority of undergraduates complete their degrees in four years. Most college graduates knew this statement was false. Similarly, 62 percent of high school graduates are not sure or believe incorrectlythat the majority of community college students graduate in two years. Many college grads werent sure about this either: 52 percent were not sure or gave an incorrect answer to this question. One of the most startling and probably one of the most crucial gaps in knowledge concerned FAFSAthe Free Application for Federal Student Aidwhich is the gateway paperwork to both federal and institutional financial aid. While nearly 7 in 10 college graduates were familiar enough with the term to know that it involved financial aid, fewer than 3 in 10 high school graduates recognized it. For many organizations working to expand access to college and increase college completion, making sure that young people complete the FAFSA is job number one. Its the first step to getting a Pell Grant or federal loan, so students who dont complete it miss out on that form of help. It is also used by colleges and universities to determine eligibility for institutional financial aid.
This is a significant gap in knowledge, but it may be one of the easiest to address. Some higher education specialists recommend, for example, tying FAFSA completion to getting a high school diploma. Just alerting guidance counselors, teachers, mentors, and those working in programs focused on improving college access and completion to the low levels of knowledge about the FAFSA could lead to a variety of helpful (and probably innovative) ways to address the problem.
Know FAFSA has something to do with financial aid Did not associate FAFSA with financial aid
27% 72%
32% 68%
College Graduates
Implications and questionssome specific and actionable, some wide-ranging and long-term
In politics, surveys are typically conducted to find out what voters want, what worries them, and how well they think the President, Congress, and other key decision makers are doing. But in this instance, the intent (and we hope the usefulness) of the research is to help leaders in government, higher education, business, youth development, and philanthropy fashion better and more workable solutions. If policymakers have a better understanding of the experiences and perspectives of young adults in the workforce, they are more likely to establish policies and programs that are realistic and responsive. If policymakers have a clearer grasp of how these young people see the world, they are more likely to develop solutions that work. Some of the implications emerging from the research are quite specific. We believe that the research suggests a need for progress in two areas:
Makingsureallhighschoolstudentsandtheir familiesunderstandwhattheFAFSAcandoforthem. If 72 percent of high school graduates cant give even a general definition of it, then theyre not likely to take advantage of it, and this gap in knowledge severely limits their options. Basically, our whole system of financial aid is not available to them until they complete the FAFSA form. This is a must. Takingafreshlookathowwellfinancialaidpolicies andprogramsworkforlow-income,workingstudents.This study and two others we have completed for the Gates Foundation (available at www.publicagenda.org/theirwholelivesaheadofthem) offer compelling evidence that the financial aid system does not work well for some young people, especially those who perhaps need it most. Not knowing what the FAFSA is and why you need to complete it is only the most specific example. Others include:
Theyarentaccessingthesystemsalreadyin place.Those who dont finish college are substantially less likely to take advantage of nearly every form of financial aidgrants, loans, scholarships, etc. They are also more likely to be low income and less likely to get help from family. Why isnt the system working for them? Whats causing the discrepancy here? Theydontseefull-timestudyasanoption. The vast majority of young people who leave college without completing their degrees have thought about returning to school, but they face a series of hurdles. Public Agendas earlier research, With Their Whole Lives Ahead of Them, shows that many feel stymied because they have to work to support themselves and their families and because they worry about taking out education loans. They say that the one change that would help them most is having more financial aid available for part-time students. Rightly or wrongly, most seem to assume that unless they can go to school full time, theres little help available to them. M anyfindthefinancialaidsystemconfusing. Young people who start college but dont finish are more likely to say the information and materials relating to financial aid are hard to understand, and theyre more likely to have taken out a loan without discussing it with a counselor. Later many regret their decision and sour on the idea of going back to school unless they can pay the full freight up front. Theyremoreskepticalaboutborrowing. Young people without degrees are more skeptical about whether its worth it to borrow money for college. For years, the financial aid system has operated on the assumptions that
people see borrowing for college as a good investment and that theyre willing to do it. This study suggests that this compact is being questioned, at least in the current economic environment and especially by lower-income students. If this shift in thinking persists, there will be a mismatch between the assumptions of the financial aid system and what students and families believe is good for them. Theyrenotgettingthekindofadvicethey deserve. Most young peoplewhether they complete college or notsay the high school counseling system did not provide the kind of help and advice they need and want.
communication. For example, the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board has partnered with Public Agenda and the Lumina Foundation on research and student engagement work aimed at improving degree completion. The Pathways Project is already providing higher education planners in Texas with specific, practical guidance that they can use to improve their programs and to help more of their students succeed.
What do we mean by college and what happens to Americans who dont go?
Finally, this study raises an important set of questions for policymakers and professionalsquestions that have been circling beneath the surface for the last several years as the emphasis on college completion has heated up: What do we mean by college? Do we mean a four-year degree only? Or should the definition include two-year degrees as well as shorter-term professional certificates? As a society, what do we owe to those who, for whatever reason, do not or cannot complete some form of college? Do we owe them anything? Is it time to think about alternative paths that could help them improve their prospects? And given their real-life situations, how can we make these alternative paths genuinely viable for them?
One Degree of Separation is based on telephone interviews with a nationally representative sample
of 611 2634 year-olds who have, at a minimum, graduated from high school. Interviews were conducted by Princeton Survey Research International, in English and Spanish, from December 20, 2010, to January 25, 2011. The questionnaire was designed by Public Agenda. Statistical results are weighted to correct known demographic discrepancies. The margin of sampling error for the complete set of weighted data is 4.5 percentage points. However, it is higher when comparing subgroups or question items that werent asked of all respondents. The survey was preceded by focus groups in Fort Wayne, Indiana and Washington, D.C., in September 2010. Survey respondents in this sample are divided into two groups, high school graduates and college graduates. High school graduates include respondents who graduated high school (or have a GED) and never pursued any higher education (23 percent of the sample) and respondents who had some higher education experience but left the program without receiving any credential, diploma, or degree (23 percent of the sample). College graduates include those who have a bachelors degree (30 percent) and those who have a graduate degree (12 percent), as well as those who have an associates degree (7 percent) and anyone who said their highest degree was a technical certificate or other credential (6 percent). For more information about the studys methodology, visit: http://www.publicagenda.org/onedegreeofseparation/methodology For other reports in the series, visit: http://www.publicagenda.org/theirwholelivesaheadofthem?qt_active=1
Below are the results from a survey of 611 2634 year-olds. Interviews were conducted between December 20, 2010 and January 25, 2011. Results of less than 0.5 percent are signified by an asterisk. Results of zero are signified by a dash. Responses may not always total 100 percent owing to rounding. Combining answer categories may produce slight discrepancies between numbers in these survey results and numbers in the report. [Note: There is no Q1]
n=206 %
n=405 %
Q2. Do you think that a college education is necessary for a person to be successful in todays work world, or do you think that there are many ways to succeed in todays work world without a college education?
College education is necessary for a person to be successful in todays work world That there are many ways to succeed in todays work world without a college education Dont know
40% 57% 2%
55% 41% 4%
Q3. Many things affect peoples success in their jobs or careers. Which of these four things do you think is most important? [Randomized order]
Being persistent and having inner drive Knowing how to deal with people well Getting a college degree Having connections with the right people Dont know
Q4. Now I would like you to think about a few different people. For each one, please tell me how likely they are to be financially secure in their lifetime. [Randomized order]
Someone who graduates from college and then goes on to a graduate school like law school or a PhD program Very likely Somewhat likely Not too likely Not at all likely Dont know You, personally Very likely Somewhat likely Not too likely Not at all likely Dont know 36% 53% 8% 1% 55% 40% 2% 1% 1% 68% 28% 1% 1% * 75% 22% 1% * 2%
**
In this report, college graduates or those with degrees are respondents who successfully completed a four-year or two-year degree or a licensed certification program. High school graduates in this report are defined as those whose highest credential is a high school diploma and who are not currently in a college or certification program.
College Grads
n=206 % Someone who has received an undergraduate college degree from your state university Very likely Somewhat likely Not too likely Not at all likely Dont know Very likely Somewhat likely Not too likely Not at all likely Dont know Someone who enlists in the military Very likely Somewhat likely Not too likely Not at all likely Dont know Very likely Somewhat likely Not too likely Not at all likely Dont know Very likely Somewhat likely Not too likely Not at all likely Dont know 33% 56% 7% 1% 2% 30% 46% 19% 3% * 26% 61% 8% 1% 3% 35% 59% 3% 1% 1% 36% 56% 5% 1% 1%
n=405 % 34% 62% 2% 1% 29% 62% 7% 1% 1% 27% 64% 5% 1% 2% 25% 45% 25% 2% 2% 14% 69% 15% 2% 1%
Someone who graduates high school and becomes an apprentice in a field such as carpentry or plumbing
Someone whose parents are wealthy but does not go to college after graduating high school
Someone who gets a one-year certificate in Information Technology (IT) management from a technical school
College Grads
n=206 % Someone who receives an associates degree at a local community college Very likely Somewhat likely Not too likely Not at all likely Dont know Very likely Somewhat likely Not too likely Not at all likely Dont know Someone who starts college at your state university but does not complete the degree Very likely Somewhat likely Not too likely Not at all likely Dont know Someone who dropped out of high school Very likely Somewhat likely Not too likely Not at all likely Dont know
Q4.1 Overall, how much has the economic recession affected you and your family?
n=405 % 14% 73% 11% 1% 2% 5% 59% 31% 4% 1% 2% 63% 31% 2% 1% 1% 14% 50% 33% 1% 28% 31% 24% 17% *
26% 67% 4% 1% 16% 58% 20% 4% 1% 7% 64% 20% 6% 1% 1% 27% 42% 25% 2% 31% 30% 26% 13% *
Someone who graduates from high school and goes right to work, but never takes any higher education courses
College Grads
n=206 %
n=405 %
Q5. How worried are you that the economic recession will continue to affect you and your family in the next few years? [Base: Answered recession affects them "a lot"]
Very worried Somewhat worried Not too worried Not at all worried Dont know
[Note: There is no Q6] [Note: There is no Q7]
Q8. Do you think of your current job as a career, a stepping stone to a career, or do you think of it as a job to get you by? [Base: Employed]
A career A stepping stone to a career Just a job to get you by Dont know
[Note: There is no Q9]
Q10. How are you paid at workdo you have a salary, are you paid by the hour, or are you mostly paid on commission? [Base: Employed]
20% 72% 8% 1%
61% 33% 3% 3%
Q10a. As far as you know, does your employer have programs to help employees go to college while still working, such as tuition reimbursement or flexible scheduling programs? [Base: Employed]
47% 47% 6%
63% 30% 6%
College Grads
n=206 %
n=405 %
Q11. Overall, about how many different employers would you say you have had since you graduated from [last school graduated from]?
One employer 2-4 employers, 5-9 employers 10 or more employers (VOL.) No employers/Never worked Dont know
Q12. Since you graduated from [last school graduated from] what is the longest time you spent unemployed and looking for work?
Less than 6 months 6 months to a year 1-2 years 3-5 years or More than 5 years Have you always been employed Dont know
Q13. Thinking about current economic conditions in the United States, please tell me how much you agree or disagree with the following statements. [Randomized order]
The high unemployment rate in the United States will probably stay this way for a long time to come Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know I think I may not be able to find a job in the next year or so Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know 29% 29% 13% 21% 11% 25% 50% 14% 1% 28% 36% 26% 7% 2% 23% 44% 25% 7% *
College Grads
n=206 % I am worried that I may have my salary or hours cut in the next year or so Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know I am worried that I may lose my job in the next year or so Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know It makes more sense to go to a college or university you can afford, you should not take out a loan to go to college if you don't have to You should go to the best college or university that you can, even if you have to take out a loan to pay for it Dont know 7% 14% 21% 58% 60% 36% 1% 18% 17% 17% 48%
Q15. Please tell me which one of the following comes closest to your own view, even if neither is exactly right.
Q14. I am going to read a list of statements that describe what some people say about getting a college education. Please tell how strongly you agree or disagree with each statement. [Randomized order]
Colleges should be doing a lot more to help students stay in school and complete their degrees Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know Even if someone has to take out a loan to go to college, it is worth it in the long run Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know 37% 39% 16% 8% * 54% 33% 8% 5% * 58% 29% 8% 3% 1% 50% 27% 13% 8% 2%
College Grads
n=206 %
n=405 %
In todays job market, there are a lot more jobs for someone with an associates degree from a community college than for someone who has only a high school diploma Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know 30% 44% 13% 10% 3% 22% 34% 21% 20% 2% 39% 37% 15% 6% 3% 15% 25% 28% 29% 2%
Colleges that offer most of their classes online are just as good as colleges where you have to go to class in person
Q16. Do you think that currently the vast majority of people who are qualified to go to college have the opportunity to do so, or do you think there are many people who are qualified to go but dont have the opportunity to do so?
Majority have the opportunity to go Do not have the opportunity to go Dont know Yes No
Q16A. Since 2008 have you had to leave or postpone going to college or another higher education program?
Q17 How much thought have you given, if at all, to going back to schoola lot of thought, some thought, or no . thought at all? [Base: Not currently in school with less than Bachelors]
Q18. Would you say you have seriously looked into a specific school, have not yet looked but plan on doing it soon, or that you are not going to look into a particular school or program anytime soon? [Base: Given some thought to going back to school]
Seriously looked at a specific school Have not yet looked but plan on doing it soon Not going to look into a particular school or program anytime soon [VOL] Already chosen/accepted into a school Dont know
College Grads
n=206 %
Q19. Which of the following applies to you? For my career goals:
My degree is all I need I need another degree besides my [highest degree attained] I dont even need my [highest attained] degree Dont know
[Note: There is no Q20]
39% 51% 8% 1%
Free Application for Federal Student Aid/application/form for financial aid/ help/student loans Federal/Government student financial aid/college loan Financial aid/Student aid/loans Pell Grants Other Dont know/No Answer
3% 6% 15% * 2% 72%
Q22. Im going to read you a few statements about college in America today. For each one, please tell me if you strongly agree, somewhat agree, somewhat disagree, or strongly disagree.
Anyone who goes to college can complete their degree if they are willing to make sacrifices, such as going part time, working, and living at home Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know Students have to borrow too much money to pay for their college education Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know 63% 26% 5% 6% 52% 36% 7% 5% * 55% 34% 7% 3% 59% 33% 7% 1% *
College Grads
n=206 % It is very difficult to get a good paying job in todays economy without a college degree Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know 33% 32% 24% 10% 1%
A lot of employers hire college graduates for jobs that could be done as well or better by people without a college degree Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know Colleges could take a lot more students without lowering quality or raising prices Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know Almost anyone who needs financial help to go to college can get financial aid Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know Society has made going to college seem more important than it really is Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know 30% 34% 23% 11% 1% 18% 31% 28% 22% 1% 26% 34% 23% 14% 3% 26% 33% 24% 17% 1% 31% 41% 16% 8% 4% 23% 33% 27% 12% 4% 35% 42% 15% 8% 24% 40% 27% 8% 1%
College Grads
n=206 % Colleges today mainly care about education and making sure students have a good educational experience Colleges today are like most businesses and care mainly about the bottom line Dont know
Q24. Do you think that the following statements are true or false? [Randomized order]
Q23. Which statement comes closest to your own view, even if neither is exactly right. [Randomized order]
25% 71% 3%
The United States is falling behind other industrialized countries when it comes to the percentage of people graduating college True False Not sure/Dont know True False Not sure/Dont know True False Not sure/Dont know Students, themselves A great deal of blame A lot of blame Some blame Only a little blame No blame at all Dont know 24% 35% 29% 6% 4% * 32% 37% 25% 4% 1% 2% 59% 18% 21% 43% 39% 19% 37% 38% 25% 69% 13% 18% 35% 48% 17% 33% 60% 7%
The majority of students who enroll in a community college to get an associates degree graduate in two years
The majority of students who enroll in a college or university to get a bachelors degree graduate in four years
Q25. How much blame do the following deserve for the graduation rates in four-year public college?
College Grads
n=206 % High schools A great deal of blame A lot of blame Some blame Only a little blame No blame at all Dont know Parents A great deal of blame A lot of blame Some blame Only a little blame No blame at all Dont know The government A great deal of blame A lot of blame Some blame Only a little blame No blame at all Dont know Colleges A great deal of blame A lot of blame Some blame Only a little blame No blame at all Dont know 6% 17% 51% 14% 12% 1% 7% 20% 38% 14% 18% 1% 8% 14% 42% 17% 18% 1% 7% 22% 36% 21% 14% *
n=405 % 12% 21% 38% 20% 8% 2% 9% 20% 38% 20% 11% 2% 7% 15% 36% 26% 15% 2% 6% 16% 53% 19% 6% 2%
College Grads
Q26. Regardless of whether you finished, how many different higher education INSTITUTIONS have you enrolled in?
Q27 For these next few questions, please think about the first higher education institution you attended after high .1 school. First, what is the name of the institution? [Base: Attended college]
RECORD NAME Dont know Public Private For-profit, proprietary institution Dont know
Q29.1 As far as you know, is this a public, private, or a for-profit institution? [Base: Attended college]
Q28.1 Was the program you enrolled in a graduate program, an undergraduate (B.A.) program, associate degree (A.A.) program, a certification or technical program, a non-certification training program, or something else? [Base: Attended postsecondary program]
A graduate program (MA, MBA, M.Ed, PhD, law school, med school, etc) An undergraduate program (BA/BS) An Associate degree (AA/AS) A certification or technical program A non degree certification program Something else [Specify] Dont know
College Grads
n=206 %
n=405 %
Q30.1 Did you enroll in this program directly after high school, one year or less after high school, or did you wait more than a year in enrolling in this program? [Base: Attended college]
Directly after high school One year or less after high school More than one year after high school
Q31.1 Did you receive a degree, diploma, certificate, or other credential from this program? [Base: Attended college]
Yes No Dont know Technical degree, certificate, certification Associate degree, community college degree Bachelor of Arts (B.A.), Bachelor of Science (B.S.) Masters degree (M.F.A., M.A., M.P.A., M.P.P., M.P.H.) Professional/Doctoral degree (Ph.D. Doctorate, Dentist D.D.S., Doctor, M.D., Law, J.D.) Something Else Dont know 99% 1%
Q32.1 What type of degree, certificate, or credential did you receive? [Base: Received degree]
Q37 How helpful do you think attending this program has been for you in succeeding financially? Would you say it .1 has been very helpful, somewhat helpful, not too helpful, or not at all helpful? [Base: Attended college]
Very helpful Somewhat helpful Not too helpful Not at all helpful Dont know Yes, currently enrolled No, no longer enrolled Dont know
Q33.1 Are you currently enrolled in this program or are you no longer enrolled? [Base: Attended college]
College Grads
n=206 %
Q34.1 Did you earn any course credits from this institution? [Base: Not enrolled in institution]
60% 37% 3%
Financial reasons With the content of the classes you were taking Personal/Life change reason Transferred schools Something else Dont know
[Note: There is no Q35.1]
Q36.1 Please tell me how you paid for this program. [Base: Attended college and received any type of financial aid]
Money from parents/relatives or personal savings Yes No Federal or state grants (such as Pell), or institutional grants Yes No Loans (federal or bank) Yes No Scholarships Yes No Something else Yes No 6% 94% 13% 87% 13% 87% 46% 54% 31% 69% 65% 35% 37% 63% 59% 41% 69% 31% 83% 17%
College Grads
n=206 %
n=405 %
Q38.1 If money was not an issue, would you have enrolled in the same program you did or enrolled in a different program? [Base: Attended college]
56% 39% 1%
66% 33% 1%
Q39.1 Regardless of whether you received any financial aid or not, did you speak with anyone at [this school] about the different loan, scholarship, or grant opportunities available to you? [Base: Attended college]
46% 52% 2%
57% 42% 1%
Q41.1 Thinking about your experiences in talking about loans, grants, scholarships, and other finacial aid opportunities with people at [this school], tell me if you agree or disagree with the following: [Base: Spoke with someone about financial aid]
They gave me useful advice about different kinds of loans and financial aid available Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know They took time to help me complete the paperwork Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know They told me where to find more information, but they did not offer hands-on help Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know 28% 15% 15% 42% 24% 25% 25% 23% 3% 37% 32% 12% 17% 3% 34% 27% 17% 19% 3% 43% 43% 10% 5% 37% 43% 10% 9%
College Grads
n=206 % The information they gave me was difficult to understand Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know They seemed to care more about the school than about me Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know 20% 17% 30% 33% 23% 16% 21% 40%
Q42. Did you take out any loans to pay for any of your education? [Base: Attended more than one school and did not take out loans for that first school]
Yes No
3% 97%
19% 81%
Q43. Thinking about all loans that you have taken out to pay for your education, would you say [Randomized order] [Base: Took out loans]
You have a long way to go before your loans are paid off You think they will be paid off in the next few years They are already paid off
Q44. Here is a list of reasons why you may not have applied for a college loan. For each one please tell me if it is a major reason, minor reason, or not a reason at all why you did not apply for a college loan: [Base: Did not take out loans]
I could pay for the higher education institution without getting a loan Major reason Minor reason Not a reason at all Dont know My parents or other relatives helped pay Major reason Minor reason Not a reason at all Dont know 23% 8% 70% 50% 11% 39% 33% 13% 52% 58% 12% 30% *
College Grads
n=206 % I dont believe it is a good idea to take out any loans Major reason Minor reason Not a reason at all Dont know I was worried it would be difficult to pay back my college loan Major reason Minor reason Not a reason at all Dont know I got a scholarship or financial aid and did not need to also take out a loan Major reason Minor reason Not a reason at all Dont know I didnt know enough about filling out the applications and there was no one to help me Major reason Minor reason Not a reason at all Dont know I didnt know about the loan opportunities available to me Major reason Minor reason Not a reason at all Dont know 9% 11% 78% 2% 10% 15% 74% 1% 17% 10% 73% 37% 14% 49% 36% 15% 47% 2%
n=405 % 26% 17% 57% 25% 14% 61% * 36% 6% 58% 1% 10% 16% 74% * 10% 19% 71% *
College Grads
n=206 %
n=405 %
Q45. And did you finish the program that you took out a loan for, or received a grant, scholarship, or other financial aid for? [Base: Received financial aid]
Yes No
14% 82%
85% 14%
Q46. Overall, do you think that the loans you took out were an excellent investment, a good investment, only a fair investment, or a poor investment? [Base: Took out loans]
Excellent investment Good investment Fair investment Poor investment Dont know
Q47 Do you agree or disagree with the following statement: If I could do it all over again I would not have taken . out the loan. [Base: Took out loans]
Strongly agree Somewhat agree Somewhat disagree Strongly disagree Dont know
Q48. Are you, yourself, responsible for paying off your loans or are your parents the ones who will pay them off? [Base: Took out loans]
I am paying off the loans My parents are paying them off (VOL.) Both
98% 2%
92% 3% 5%
College Grads
n=206 %
Q49. Do you currently have a credit card that you are not paying back in full every month or not?
Yes No Very important Somewhat important Not too important Not at all important Dont know
D10. How important is it to you that your children, or children in your care, go to college? [Base: Parents]
College Grads
n=206 %
Race / Ethnicity
n=405 % 66% 11% 11% 12% 36% 29% 35% 49% 51% 21% 23% 38% 18% 13% 48% 36% 54% 5% 5% 2% * 33%
60% 13% 22% 4% 32% 41% 28% 55% 45% 12% 24% 37% 27% 22% 42% 34% 47% 7% 5% 6% 36%
Male Female
Census region
College Grads
High School
n=206 %
People in household
n=405 % 15% 28% 21% 22% 9% 3% 1% 40% 22% 25% 10% 3% * 4% 5% 12% 13% 21% 40% 53% 36% 8% 1%
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 or greater
Children under 18 in household
10% 22% 24% 24% 14% 4% 2% 29% 26% 24% 14% 5% 2% 14% 14% 15% 22% 17% 15% 41% 37% 22% *
0 1 2 3 4 5
Household income
Under $15,000 $15,000 to under $25,000 $25,000 to under $35,000 $35,000 to under $50,000 $50,000 to under $75,000 $75,000 or more
Past family income
Generally had extra money each month Made ends meet, but usually didnt have money left over each month Had trouble getting by each month Dont know
College Grads
High School
n=206 %
Parents' highest degree
HS Diploma or GED A technical or vocational certificate A two-year associates degree A four-year bachelors degree A graduate degree Something else None/both parents have less than HS diploma Dont know
Highest education completed
HS Diploma or GED Certification program Trade or vocational school Associates degree Bachelors degree Graduate degree
Employment status
College Grads
High School
OUR THANKS
The authors of One Degree of Separation would like to thank the following people for their support and assistance during the preparation of this report: Our partners at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in Seattle, Washington and Washington, D.C., for providing us with the opportunity to conduct this research and the freedom to explore the issues without constraint or bias; Arthur White, founder of Jobs for the Future, for his contributions to the conception of the project and his invaluable counsel and support; Dan Yankelovich and Barbara Lee for their insight and guidance; Amber Ott, for her work developing the survey on which this report is based; Alison Kadlec, for her invaluable feedback on early versions of this report; Sanura Weathers for her help in producing this report and her commitment to excellent design; Scott Bittle, David White and Allison Rizzolo, of PublicAgenda.org, for producing a distinctive and highly informative online version of this report; And Public Agenda president Will Friedman for his vision, insight, and guidance.
Guided by the belief that every life has equal value, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation works to help all people lead healthy, productive lives. In developing countries, it focuses on improving peoples health and giving them the chance to lift themselves out of hunger and extreme poverty. In the United States, it seeks to ensure that all peopleespecially those with the fewest resourceshave access to the opportunities they need to succeed in school and in life. Based in Seattle, Washington, the foundation is led by CEO Jeff Raikes and co-chair William H. Gates Sr., under the direction of Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett.
CO-FOUNDER
Cyrus Vance (19172002) Former Secretary of State
HONORARY MEMBERS
Peter G. Peterson Chairman, Peter G. Peterson Foundation Bobby R. Inman Admiral, U.S. Navy (Retired) Judith Davidson Moyers President, Public Affairs Television, Inc.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Norton Garfinkle Chairman, Future of American Democracy Foundation, and Senior Editor, Yale University Press Series on Future of American Democracy
Copyright (c) 2011 Public Agenda This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 171 Second Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California 94105, USA PUBLIC AGENDA 6 East 39th Street New York, NY 10016 t (212) 686.6610 f (212) 889.3461 www.PublicAgenda.org